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University of Florida Levin College of LawThu, 09 Jul 2015 14:01:34 +0000en-UShourly1http://wordpress.org/?v=4.2.3Running For Catherine: Honoring a Classmate One Mile at a Timehttp://www.law.ufl.edu/flalaw/2008/02/running-for-catherine-honoring-a-classmate-one-mile-at-a-time/
http://www.law.ufl.edu/flalaw/2008/02/running-for-catherine-honoring-a-classmate-one-mile-at-a-time/#commentsMon, 04 Feb 2008 00:00:43 +0000http://www.law.ufl.edu/wpflalaw/?p=3570When 22-year-old Catherine Barclift was killed while training for the Feb. 24 Five Points of Life Half Marathon, her classmates at the University of Florida’s Levin College of Law were left both stunned and filled with grief.

Now a group of more than 50 of her classmates and friends have signed on to run in her honor in that same race that’s sponsored by LifeSouth Community Blood Centers, with an effort they’ve dubbed “I’m Running for Catherine.” Alex Perrin and Justin Leak, who are both first-year law students and were classmates of Barclift, have helped organize the effort. Leak says he didn’t know Catherine—Cat to her friends—personally, but he could see the impact her death on Nov. 6 had on his fellow students. Barclift was struck and critically injured as she was running home to her apartment and died the following day.

“I was out for a run and I thought we needed to do something to honor her,” Leak says. “I thought ‘She was preparing for a half-marathon, why don’t we run in her honor’.”

He bounced the idea off of Perrin, Barclift’s neighbor, friend and classmate. The two had met under unusual circumstances just before classes began in the fall. Barclift came knocking on Perrin’s front door and brought her out of the tub, dripping wet, and wrapped in a towel to answer it. It turned out the tub was leaking badly through the floor directly into Barclift’s apartment below. The neighbors soon learned they had a lot in common.

“Catherine and I were real close,” Perrin says. “We were pretty much together every day.”

And by the time of her death, Barclift’s circle of close friends had grown during her short time in Gainesville.

“She was very gregarious, very funny, very outgoing, very warm, she knew everybody on campus in just weeks,” Perrin says.

That social side of Catherine Barclift came as no surprise to her parents, Robert and Stephanie Barclift of Fort Myers. Stephanie Barclift explains that when Catherine was growing up, she switched schools several times, so she knew what it was like to be the new person, the one on the outside of the cliques.

“She would make the extra effort to get to know people,” she says.

And at the UF law college Catherine Barclift found her niche.

“She was impressed with the people she was with,” says Stephanie Barclift. “It’s truly a wonderful community of students and professors.”

And she says those who did get to know her daughter were often surprised. Yes, she was attractive, liked nice clothes, but she had a real sense of adventure. She’d paddled a sea kayak off of Alaska and hiked on a glacier. She also had an inner toughness, demonstrated during the summer of 2005 when she was studying in London and terrorists blew up a double-decker bus just yards from her apartment. Many other American students came home after that incident, but Catherine chose to stay.

Stephanie Barclift says Catherine could also surprise her professors on occasion. While she’d accrued academic honors as an undergrad at Florida State and tallied prestigious internships on her résumé, when asked to write about what she was most proud of in her life, she picked a topic much closer to home, “she wrote about her younger sister Caroline.”

Early in the semester Perrin and Barclift and a few other female law students decided to start running for exercise and for stress release. They posted a page on the Facebook social networking Web site called “Look Pretty Run Nasty,” and the goal of running the Five Points of Life half-marathon took shape.

Robert Barclift says as a youngster Catherine had run 5K races with him, but he wouldn’t have described her as a runner.

“She was more of a lyrical soprano than a jock,” he says. “Her focus was more on music, she did sports more for fun.”

Perrin says during the semester Barclift began to take her training seriously.

“She was running every day, she was so excited, she’d gotten up to six miles,” Perrin says.

The fact that his daughter would get serious about the running, did not surprise Robert Barclift. He says it’s a family trait.

“When we decide to do something, we laser in on it,” he says.

The accident occurred as she was running home from a workout at the gym, and she stepped into the path of a SUV while crossing SW 34th St. She was only about a block from home. She was taken to Shands at the University of Florida, but her injuries were too severe for survival. Her last gift was herself, Catherine Barclift was an organ donor – her heart, her two kidneys, her liver and one lung, went to five different patients who’d pinned their hopes for life on such a gift. Robert Barclift says he remembers going with Catherine in June of 2001 when she got her driver’s license, where the question is posed, “Would you wish to be an organ donor?” and he asked her how she felt about that.

“Without hesitation, she said she’d like to do that,” he recalls.

And before she died there was another reminder.

“My wife pulled out her driver’s license and there it was,” he says.

And the tragic irony isn’t lost on her father—the daughter who became an organ donor was training for a race, the Five Points of Life, which has a goal to promote five life-saving steps people can take, and one of those steps is signing up as an organ donor and sharing your thoughts and wishes with those you know and love.

“We felt good about it that she’d made that decision and that she had helped others,” Robert Barclift says.

On campus, the sign-ups continue. “I’m Running for Catherine” now has its own Facebook page that her law school classmates, old friends from FSU, sorority sisters from Gamma Phi Beta and more have visited. Some of the students who know they can’t run a half-marathon are signing up for the 5Points 5K on Feb. 23. Others have volunteered to help on race day, while others have contributed money to support the Five Points of Life program.

Alex Perrin says part of the challenge for her was just running outside again in Gainesville, but she’s been able to do that. Running for her friend, and running for a cause have helped. Classmate and fellow organizer Justin Leak agrees and says the effort has added focus to his training.

“It’s given me an incentive. When you are doing it in somebody’s honor it carries a lot more weight,” he says.

And it’s an effort and thought that’s touched her family as well.

“We feel honored both for us and for Catherine,” says Robert Barclift.

]]>http://www.law.ufl.edu/flalaw/2008/02/running-for-catherine-honoring-a-classmate-one-mile-at-a-time/feed/0Whitman Discusses Land Owner Who Was Ordered To Pay $2.3 Million For Clearing Forest Without Permithttp://www.law.ufl.edu/flalaw/2008/02/whitman-discusses-land-owner-who-was-ordered-to-pay-2-3-million-for-clearing-forest-without-permit/
http://www.law.ufl.edu/flalaw/2008/02/whitman-discusses-land-owner-who-was-ordered-to-pay-2-3-million-for-clearing-forest-without-permit/#commentsMon, 04 Feb 2008 00:00:41 +0000http://www.law.ufl.edu/wpflalaw/?p=3599UF Law Visiting Professor Dale Whitman (pictured left) recently was quoted in the Tallahassee Democrat in an article discussing a Leon County landowner, Johnny Petrandis II, who was ordered by a judge in September to pay a $2.3 million fine—the largest ever awarded to Leon County—for contempt of court involving his clearing more than 60 acres of high-quality forest in 2004 without a permit. The judge in the case is holding a hearing to determine whether the cost of the environmental damage can be documented and whether Petrandis can pay. This case is being compared to someone getting pulled over for a speeding ticket but claiming they can’t afford to pay it and being left with a warning. Whitman said it’s not the same as arguing a speeding ticket because traffic fines are set in statute. Courts have a lot of discretion to issue contempt of court fines but it is not unlimited. “You can hurt, but you can’t kill—so to speak—financially,” he said. “You have to give an award that is commensurate with the individual’s ability to pay.” Keep up with what UF Law faculty are saying in the media and writing about in scholarly publications in FlaLaw Online’s weekly updates on Faculty Scholarship & Activities.
]]>http://www.law.ufl.edu/flalaw/2008/02/whitman-discusses-land-owner-who-was-ordered-to-pay-2-3-million-for-clearing-forest-without-permit/feed/0Student Blends Passions for Media and the Law in Pursuit of Dual Degreeshttp://www.law.ufl.edu/flalaw/2008/02/student-blends-passions-for-media-and-the-law-in-pursuit-of-dual-degrees/
http://www.law.ufl.edu/flalaw/2008/02/student-blends-passions-for-media-and-the-law-in-pursuit-of-dual-degrees/#commentsMon, 04 Feb 2008 00:00:05 +0000http://www.law.ufl.edu/wpflalaw/?p=3591Many law students get overwhelmed when just trying to balance their law school classload during the semester, and not many students can handle the pressure of pursuing a master’s degree on top of their JD curriculum, but second-year law student Adrienne Biddings is doing just that.

North Carolina native Biddings, 23, is simultaneously pursuing her master’s degree in mass communications and JD, planning to graduate in May 2009. Her passion for pursuing two graduate degrees in such a short period of time came from her interest of the media and her future goal of working within media law.

Biddings’ passion for media began when she was an undergraduate student at the University of Miami, where she received her bachelor’s degree in broadcasting. Biddings contemplated pursuing a law degree throughout her undergraduate education, but then the priority of money took over.

With the pressure to make money, Biddings spent her year off before starting law school working as a producer at WPLG, an ABC affiliate television station in Miami. Even though Biddings really enjoyed the people she worked with at the station, she still had a desire to attend law school to pursue her passion of media law.

Her interest in media law came about through her broadcasting classes at college and job experience at the television station. It was through these opportunities that Biddings had the chance to see firsthand the business aspect of the media. While most broadcast students are artistic and want to be seen on air, Biddings differs in that her passion within the media is more of the business side of the media.

Through trying to balance her pre-existing interest of law and her excitement of media, she wanted to mesh both together. It didn’t take long for Biddings to realize that to be able to work in the business aspect of media, it is necessary to understand the law. “To do the business side, you have to know the law,” she said.

It was at this time and with an with an extra push from her parents who thought she needed to take the risk and continue her education, Biddings decided to attend law school. “They thought I had the opportunity to do more,” she said. Her parents were constantly reminding her, “If you don’t go back to school, you never will,” she said. “Don’t lose momentum while you still have it.”

However, it was difficult for Biddings to make the switch from full-time employee back to the student lifestyle. “I didn’t want to be poor again as a college student,” she said. And worst of all, this adamant Miami Hurricane fan would have to leave her large city and become Gator bound.

While in Gainesville continuing her education, Biddings has a lot on her plate but many would be surprised to learn how calm she is about the whole experience. She insists that she has tons of free time despite earning two graduate degrees in three years.

Biddings handles the pressures of her graduate education with excellent time management and scheduling. “Take it as a job, try to do the same thing everyday – stay on course,” she said.

Even though Biddings keeps a rigorous daily schedule, she relies on her usual nine hours of sleep each night and staying away from her textbooks during the evenings and weekends to keep her positive mindset. She tries to focus only on school Monday through Friday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and makes it a priority to fit in one of her favorite hobbies – TV. Biddings relies on her TiVo to record the two to three hours of television that she watches each night.

Aside from spending her days in the classroom, Biddings still has enough time to be actively involved in various student organizations, including Law College Council, Student Advocacy Coalition, Law Association of Women, and Faculty Development Diversity Committee at the College of Journalism and Communications.

Although Biddings’ lifestyle is busy, she is persistent that she loves her life right now because it seems uncomplicated and she doesn’t have to prove anything to anyone. “I am not unaccountable to anyone but myself,” she said. “If I fail, I am only failing myself.”

After receiving her graduate degrees, Biddings hopes to leave Gainesville and move to a bigger city to work towards her dream job of becoming the general counsel for a large media conglomerate.

She believes that her experience and education in both the law and media put her ahead of the competition when working within media law because she understands the internal structure of both sides of the organization.

While most students don’t even contemplate attempting the coursework for two degree programs, Biddings thinks that is the best bang for her buck. Pursuing dual degrees mixes it up and you save money because you only have one tuition, she said.

Biddings is viewed as a very relaxed individual who does not give into the overwhelming anxiety and pressure of law school. “Law school is only intense if you make it that way,” she said. “You don’t know how much you can push yourself until you do it.”

However, Biddings is still hesitant if graduating law school is going to be worth her initial sacrifice of leaving her well-paid job. “I’ll let you know when it’s over,” she said.